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Trump seeks to ‘finish Russia’ after Gaza ceasefire

Ava Thompson by Ava Thompson
October 16, 2025
in Local News, Top Stories
Reading Time: 11 mins read
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WASHINGTON (AP) – President Donald Trump said Thursday he would meet again with Russia’s Vladimir Putin to try to end the war in Ukraine. No date has been set, but Trump wrote on social media that the meeting would take place in Budapest, Hungary.

“I think great progress has been made through today’s phone conversation,” Trump wrote after speaking with Putin. They had already met in Alaska in August, but did not result in a diplomatic breakthrough.

“We are ready!” » Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said on social media after the announcement.

Ahead of Trump’s meeting with Putin, U.S. officials, led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, will meet with Russian representatives next week. It is not clear where this meeting will take place.

The announcement came ahead of Trump’s meeting Friday at the White House with Ukraine’s president. Volodymyr Zelenskywho pressured Trump to sell kyiv Tomahawk missiles that would allow Ukrainian forces to strike deeper into Russian territory. Zelenskyy argued that such strikes would help Putin take more seriously Trump’s calls for direct negotiations between Russia and Ukraine to end the war.

Trump told reporters traveling with him to Israel on Sunday that he had scheduled to discuss the Tomahawks with Putin to put pressure on him to end Russia’s war in Ukraine. “Do they want the Tomahawks to go in that direction? I don’t think so,” Trump said Sunday. “I think I could talk to Russia about it.”

With a fragile Ceasefire between Israel and Hamas and hostage agreement Trump said he was now turning his attention to ending the war in Ukraine and weighing supplying long-range weapons to Kyiv as he seeks to push Moscow to the negotiating table.

Ending the wars in Ukraine and Gaza was at the heart of Trump’s 2024 re-election speech, in which he consistently pilloried the president. Joe Biden for its conflict management. Yet, like his predecessor, Trump has also been hampered by Poutine as he unsuccessfully urged the Russian leader to hold direct talks with Zelensky end the war, which is approaching its fourth year.

But just after the Gaza ceasefire, Trump is showing new confidence in his ability to finally make progress in ending the Russian invasion. He also signals that he is ready to step up pressure on Putin if he does not come to the table soon.

“It’s interesting that we made progress today, because of what happened in the Middle East,” Trump said Wednesday night about the war between Russia and Ukraine, as he hosted supporters of his White House ballroom plan for a lavish dinner.

Earlier this week, in Jerusalem, in a speech to the KnessetTrump predicted that the Gaza truce would set the stage for the United States to help Israel and many of its Middle Eastern neighbors normalize relations. But Trump also made clear that his top foreign policy priority now was to end Europe’s largest armed conflict since World War II.

“We have to finish Russia first,” Trump said, turning to his special envoy. Steve Wittkoffwho was also his administration’s main point of contact with Putin. “We need to finish this one. If you don’t mind, Steve, let’s focus on Russia first. Okay?”


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks during a joint news conference with European Parliament President Roberta Metsola in Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, September 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Trump evaluates Tomahawks for Ukraine

Trump is expected to host Zelensky on Friday for talks, their fourth face-to-face meeting this year.

Before the meeting, Trump said he was considering selling long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles to kyiv. Putin made clear that supplying Tomahawks to Ukraine would cross a red line and further damage relations between Moscow and Washington.

But Trump was undeterred.

“He would like to have Tomahawks,” Trump said of Zelensky on Tuesday. “We have a lot of Tomahawks.”

Agreeing to sell the Ukrainian Tomahawks would be a dramatic move, said Mark Montgomery, an analyst at the conservative Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington. But it could take years to supply and train kyiv Tomahawk system.

Montgomery said Ukraine could be better served in the short term with an increase in extended-range attack munitions, or ERAM, missiles and Army tactical missile system, known as ATACMS. The United States has already approved the sale of 3,350 ERAMs to kyiv earlier this year.

The Tomahawk, with a range of about 995 miles (1,600 kilometers), would allow Ukraine to strike much deeper into Russian territory than the ERAM (about 285 miles, or 460 kilometers) or the ATACMS (about 186 miles, or 300 kilometers).

“Providing Tomahawks is as much a political decision as it is a military decision,” Montgomery said. “ERAM has a shorter range, but it can help them put pressure on Russia operationally, on its logistics, its command and control, and the deployment of its forces several hundred kilometers from the front line. This can be very effective.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin leads a cabinet meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Wednesday, October 15, 2025. (Alexander Kazakov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Russian President Vladimir Putin leads a cabinet meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Wednesday, October 15, 2025. (Alexander Kazakov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Signs of White House interest in new sanctions against Russia

Zelensky is expected to reiterate his call for Trump to hit the Russian economy with new sanctions, something the Republican so far appears reluctant to do.

Congress has considered legislation that would bring tougher sanctions against Moscow, but Trump has largely focused his attention on pressuring NATO members and other allies to stop purchases of Russian oil, the engine that powers Moscow’s war machine. To that end, Trump said Wednesday that India, which became one of Russia’s biggest crude buyers after Ukraine’s invasion, had agreed to stop buying oil from Moscow.

Pending Trump’s blessing, the Senate is awaiting a bill that would impose high tariffs on countries that buy Russian oil, gas, uranium and other exports in an effort to economically cripple Moscow.

Although the president has not formally endorsed it — and Republican leaders are not considering moving forward without his support — the White House has, behind the scenes, shown greater interest in the bill in recent weeks.

Administration officials reviewed the legislation in depth, proposing changes and requesting technical changes, according to two officials with knowledge of the discussions between the White House and Senate. That was interpreted on Capitol Hill as a sign that Trump is taking the legislation, sponsored by his close ally Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., as well as Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., more seriously.

A White House official said the administration was working with lawmakers to ensure “the bills introduced advance the President’s foreign policy goals and authorities.” The official, who was granted anonymity to discuss private deliberations, said any sanctions package must give the president “complete flexibility.”

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday that the administration expects greater buy-in from Europe, which he said faces a greater threat of Russian aggression than the United States.

“So all I hear from the Europeans is that Putin is coming to Warsaw,” Bessent said. “There are very few things in life that I’m sure of. I’m sure he won’t come to Boston. So we will respond…if our European partners join us.”

___

Associated Press writers Fatima Hussein, Chris Megerian and Didi Tang contributed to this report.

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